by H. Tyagi, A. Kyrillidis, B. Gärtner, A. Krause
Abstract:
A function $f: R^d \rightarrow R$ is referred to as a Sparse Additive Model (SPAM), if it is of the form $f(x) = \sum_{l \in S}\phi_l(x_l)$, where $S \subset [d]$, $|S| \ll \d$. Assuming $\phi_l$'s and $S$ to be unknown, the problem of estimating $f$ from its samples has been studied extensively. In this work, we consider a generalized SPAM, allowing for second order interaction terms. For some $\S_1 \subset [d], \S_2 \subset {[d] \choose 2}$, the function $f$ is assumed to be of the form: $f(x) = \sum_{p \in S_1}\phi_{p} (x_p) + \sum_{(l,l') \in S_2}\phi_{l,l'} (x_{l},x_{l'}).$ Assuming $\phi_{p},\phi_{l,l'}$, $S_1$ and, $S_2$ to be unknown, we provide a randomized algorithm that queries $f$ and exactly recovers $S_1,S_2$. Consequently, this also enables us to estimate the underlying $\phi_p, \phi_{l,l'}$. We derive sample complexity bounds for our scheme and also extend our analysis to include the situation where the queries are corrupted with noise - either stochastic, or arbitrary but bounded. Lastly, we provide simulation results on synthetic data, that validate our theoretical findings.
Reference:
Learning Sparse Additive Models with Interactions in High Dimensions H. Tyagi, A. Kyrillidis, B. Gärtner, A. KrauseIn Proc. International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Statistics (AISTATS), 2016
Bibtex Entry:
@inproceedings{tyagi16learning\phi_l(x_l)$, where $S \subset [d]$, $|S| \ll \d$. Assuming $\phi_l$'s and $S$ to be unknown, the problem of estimating $f$ from its samples has been studied extensively. In this work, we consider a generalized SPAM, allowing for second order interaction terms. For some $\S_1 \subset [d], \S_2 \subset {[d] \choose 2}$, the function $f$ is assumed to be of the form:
$f(x) = \sum_{p \in S_1}\phi_{p} (x_p) + \sum_{(l,l') \in S_2}\phi_{l,l'} (x_{l},x_{l'}).$
Assuming $\phi_{p},\phi_{l,l'}$, $S_1$ and, $S_2$ to be unknown, we provide a randomized algorithm that queries $f$ and exactly recovers $S_1,S_2$. Consequently, this also enables us to estimate the underlying $\phi_p, \phi_{l,l'}$. We derive sample complexity bounds for our scheme and also extend our analysis to include the situation where the queries are corrupted with noise - either stochastic, or arbitrary but bounded. Lastly, we provide simulation results on synthetic data, that validate our theoretical findings.
},
author = {Hemant Tyagi and Anastasios Kyrillidis and Bernd G\"artner and Andreas Krause},
booktitle = {Proc. International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Statistics (AISTATS)},
month = {May},
title = {Learning Sparse Additive Models with Interactions in High Dimensions},
year = {2016}}